2011
DOI: 10.1080/1369183x.2011.521359
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To Belong in Aotearoa New Zealand: Latin American Migrant Experiences in Multicultural Auckland

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Cited by 11 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Alongside the history of colonization and settler society, immigrant recruitment has been the part of the nation-building project in New Zealand (Spoonley, 2015). Until the 1950s, immigrants were predominantly from countries such as Ireland and the UK due to ‘a range of restrictions based on a colonial model and racist ideologies’ (Dürr, 2011: 506). After the 1950s, immigration shifted from a ‘racial to an economic focused’ system (Spoonley, 2015).…”
Section: Overview Of Immigration and (Im)migrants’ Belongingness In New Zealandmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Alongside the history of colonization and settler society, immigrant recruitment has been the part of the nation-building project in New Zealand (Spoonley, 2015). Until the 1950s, immigrants were predominantly from countries such as Ireland and the UK due to ‘a range of restrictions based on a colonial model and racist ideologies’ (Dürr, 2011: 506). After the 1950s, immigration shifted from a ‘racial to an economic focused’ system (Spoonley, 2015).…”
Section: Overview Of Immigration and (Im)migrants’ Belongingness In New Zealandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After the 1950s, immigration shifted from a ‘racial to an economic focused’ system (Spoonley, 2015). In the post-war period, the flow of European migration was destabilized by a flux of non-British, semi-skilled and unskilled labor mobility primarily from the Pacific Islands (Dürr, 2011; Simon-Kumar, 2015; Spoonley, 2015). Simon-Kumar (2015: 1172) explains that ‘[s]ince the mid-1980s, immigration policy in New Zealand has clearly worked towards neoliberal goals of attracting skilled labour and boosting economic productivity’.…”
Section: Overview Of Immigration and (Im)migrants’ Belongingness In New Zealandmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…the family) and size (usually small, to begin with), and their capacity for regeneration and recuperation is an indicator of the success of the processes of integration and community participation (Maya, 2009). Latin American migrant experiences in different contexts, as for example self-positioning in the wider social matrix and their perceived forms of inclusion, are shaped by political ideas, class and economic opportunities (Durr, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%